During the second episode on April 17, Guerrero (31-1-1, 18 knockouts) vowed to deliver “the worst beating” upon Mayweather, who called the challenger a “F___in’ dumb ass.”

On Wednesday at 10 p.m. ET/PT, Showtime will air the third of five episodes of All-Access: Mayweather vs. Guerrero, during which Mayweather (43-0, 26 KOs) calls Guerrero “a religious guy” who is a “big-time hypocrite” in advance of his May 4 defense against the southpaw fighter at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on Showtime Pay Per View.

“This is a religious guy, you know, but he has Marilyn Monroe on his wall in his house. He’s been contradicting himself. Big-time hypocrite. He’s preaching how he’s supposed to be a role model. Talk about me, but this kid, you know, f___ing people’s lawns up with a dusty-assed truck,” said Mayweather.

“He said he’s been calling me out for a year. I really don’t know him. Ony from a couple of clips that I’ve seen. But just for starters, he’s a flat-footed fighter. But me, myself, I’m a winner. I know how to win. Come fight night, I’m always able to expose any fighter’s weakness.”

Coming off November’s unanimous decision over two-time 147-pound titleholder Andre Berto in his last fight, Guerrero, 29, has become increasingly critical of Mayweather, who was the world’s highest-paid athlete last year.

Mayweather, 36, last fought on May 5 of last year, earning a unanimous decision victory over MiguelCotto for the WBA’s junior middleweight belt.

NONITO DONAIRE RECOVERING FROM SHOULDER SURGERY

Junior featherweight Nonito Donaire (31-2, 20 KOs) is recovering from arthroscopic surgery performed by Dr. Shabi Kahn on Friday, April 19, at Seton Medical Center in Daly City, Calif., on Donaire’s right shoulder that repaired two tears, according to an initial report by Manila Standard.

Donaire fought through the injury during an April 13 unanimous decision loss to Guillermo Rigondeaux, who added the RING and WBO championships to the WBA belt he already owned.

“I’m good. The surgery went well. We needed to get that done,” said Donaire, according to the Manila Standard, adding, that Kahn “did a really amazing job,” and, “I feel great.”

Two days prior to losing to Rigondeaux at New York’s Radio City Music Hall, Donaire received the Sugar Ray Robinson Trophy for being named Fighter of The year for 2012 by the Boxing Writers’ Association of America.

“Right now, the most important thing is waiting for the baby. I’m very excited about that and feel very good,” said Donaire. “I want to be 100 percent going into the ring next time around. I’ll give it eight weeks of rehab right now and then begin workouts.”

ZAB JUDAH SAYS DANNY GARCIA’S INJURY PROLONGED AN INEVITABLE LOSS

On Saturday night at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, Philadelphia’s Danny Garcia (25-0, 16 KOs) will defend RING, WBA and WBC junior welterweight belts against former 140-pound titleholder and welterweight champ Zab Judah (42-7, 29 KOs) in a bout that was postponed from its original date of Feb. 9 due to a rib injury suffered by Garcia.

“Actually I think it was a blessing in disguise. God is the best planner of everybody,” said Judah, 35, of the injury which delayed the fight.

“We think that we have plans, but apparently he plans better than us. I took training camp very seriously from November all the way up until now. I think the extra preparation is the icing on the cake.”

Judah also sees the clash as a chance to silence Garcia’s smack-talking father and trainer, Angel Garcia.

“It’s called killing two birds with one stone. Angel Garcia’s a trainer. He’s a father. He’s the older man. I respect my elders,” said Judah, a Las Vegas resident who is from Brooklyn.

“At the same time, I can’t get in the ring and fight Angel Garcia. What do I do? I fight. I knock people out. I can’t do that with Angel. I am going to knock Danny Garcia out and watch Angel come in there and pick him up.”

DANNY JACOBS RETURNS TO BARCLAYS IN HIS NATIVE BROOKLYN

Middleweight prospect Danny Jacobs (24-1, 21 KOs), of Brooklyn, was last at Barclays Center in October, when he stopped Josh Luteran in the first round on the undercard of Garcia’s fourth-round knockout of Erik Morales.

Jacobs, 26, will face Keenan Collins (15-7-3, 10 KOs) on Saturday’s Garcia-Judah undercard, and will be in search of his fifth straight knockout victory since, himself, falling by fifth-round stoppage to Dmitry Pirog in July of 2010.

“It feels good. A little bit more pressure is off of me now. The first time around was kind of special, so I was a little nervous, but I feel good now. I feel confident,” said Jacobs, of returning to Brooklyn and Barclays Center.

“My opponent is a last minute replacement, but at the same time we’re going to go in there and do our job. I’m just going to go in there and not even think about it. I’m just going to do what I was trained to do. I have a job and my job is to go in there and get the victory by any means necessary.”

Also on the Garcia-Judah card is 2012 U.S. Olympic team member Marcus Browne (3-0, 3 KOs), a 22-year-old Staten Island, N.Y., resident who will face Phildadelphia’s Taneal Goyco (4-5-1, 2 KOs) in a light heavyweight bout.

Last month, Browne scored a first-round knockout of Jason Thorpe on the undercard of Bernard Hopkins‘ unanimous decision that dethroned Tavoris Cloud as IBF 175-pound titleholder at Barclays Center.

“Danny is like a big brother to me. I love Danny,” said Browne of Jacobs. “Being in the gym with him and working right next to him means a lot. He showed me the way. It’s a beautiful thing.”

TOKA KAHN CLARY ON BOSTON BOMBER SUSPECT TAMERLAN TSARNAEV:

Junior lightweight Toka Khan Clary, of Providence, R.I., was working at an elderly center in his hometown last week when he got the call from his mother about the death in a shootout of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, a former amateur teammate of his in 2009 who is alleged to have been the mastermind behind last week’s Boston Marathon bombing.

“She realized that it was a picture was of the boxing team, and she thought to herself, ‘I think that my son has this picture at home,’ and she called me. That’s when I realized who she was talking about, that big, 200-pound Russian kid. That strong kid. That’s when I started really watching the news, because I realized that it was him.”

Clary, 20, has the photo of the 2009 team in an album maintained by his mother.

“That was 2009, so I was probably about 16. Before I knew about all of this, the bombing and stuff, I knew him as being really quiet and somebody who kept to himself. He didn’t really speak English that well. He didn’t really bother anybody, but he more or less didn’t really hang with the rest of the team. He didn’t really go anywhere with us when we would travel,” said Clary.

“We would go to the mall and stuff and he wouldn’t go. He stayed in his room. There’s no doubt that he did it, but it’s crazy, because what if he would have thought of doing something when we were traveling with him, like, in the airplanes and we were around a lot of crowds. I feel really bad for all of the people that were hurt by it. I don’t know what he was thinking. It’s really messed up. I don’t what got into in his head or what happened to him. I just think that that was a really f–ked up thing for him to do.”

In his last fight, on the Rigondeaux-Donaire undercard, Clary (5-0, 4 KOs) scored three knockdowns during his first round stoppage of Gadiel Andulez, of San Juan, P.R.

Rodriguez informed Yahoo!Sports in an interview last week that he watched the news about the bombing shortly after his wife, Stephanie, gave birth to their third child, Evan Kaden Rodriguez, on Monday.

Tsarnaev’s younger brother and suspected accomplice, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, has been arrested and charged while being held in custody.

HALL OF FAME GETS A $50,000 DONATION FROM JAGERMEISTER

The Nevada Boxing Hall of Fame has received a $50,000 donation from Jägermeister in advance of its its first fan event entitled “A Night with Boxing Legends” that is slated for May 2 at 7:30 p.m. PT at Diego’s Méxican Cuisine restaurant at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Jägermeister has aligned with Roach and the Nevada Hall of Fame in conjunction with “A Brother in your Corner,” the iconic brand’s social responsibility campaign and consumer competition. Roach and Jägermeister announced their partnership in February in an attempt to develop responsible consumption.